Poverty   

Improving Quality of Life in Sprawling Slums

Penelope Chester March 19, 2010 - 9:59 am

Comment ( 0 )  

Ed note:  We want to welcome our newest contributor to these pages.  Penelope is a Franco-American national living in Toronto.  She has a BA from Tufts University (go Jumbos!) and an MA in International Affairs from Sciences-Po.  Her interests lie primarily at the intersection of international affairs, economic development and foreign policy, with a particular focus on African issues and post-conflict reconstruction. She has worked for the Clinton Foundation and is co-founder of The Niapele Project, an NGO focused on improving the livelihoods of vulnerable children through grassroots initiatives in West Africa.  Without further ado...

A striking BBC news headline piqued my interest the other day: “UN says 227m people escaped slums in past decade”. I clicked through the potential “good news” story, hoping to brighten up my day with some statistics about the shrinking size of the global slum-dwelling population. However, the headline was misleading. While UN Habitat’s newest report, State of the World Cities 2010/11: Bridging the Urban Divide, notes that “a total 227 million people in the world have moved out of slum conditions since 2000”, its authors also quickly add that the total number of slum dwellers has actually increased by 55 million, “from 776.7 million in 2000 to some 827.6 million in 2010.”

What’s particularly interesting is that the UN is touting this number as an achievement of one of the Millennium Development Goals, MDG 7d: “Achieve significant improvement in lives of at least 100 million slum dwellers, by 2020”. Yes, the 227 million figure suggests that governments and organizations working on this issue have collectively surpassed the target. However, the fact that the slum population continues to grow - in spite of these advances - means that while progress has been made, a lot still needs to be done. It’s estimated that, “short of drastic action”, the global slum-dwelling population will continue to grow by six million a year, hitting 889 million in 2020.

Across the world, a number of initiatives are being developed to improve quality of life in slums and shanty towns. China and India’s efforts in reducing hardship in urban areas have been particularly critical: “Together”, the UN Habitat report notes, “they have lifted at least 125 million out of slum conditions between 1990 and 2010.” In addition to the initiatives undertaken by governments, private entrepreneurs are also seeking to reinvent slum life - if you can’t take the slum dweller out of the slum, or eliminate migration from rural areas, then you can redefine slum life and improve it.

That’s what a group called Urban Think Tank is working on. The group wanted to create a public transportation system in the barrios of Caracas that would serve the community without destroying thousands of homes to build roads - they also offer design services to the community for next to nothing, and are attempting to shift urban planners and politicians’ paradigm about slums and their potential. The public transportation they are currently building - Metro Cable - is a 2.1 km cable car system (integrated with the Metro System of Caracas) which employs gondolas holding 8 passengers each. Metro Cable’s capacity allows for the movement of 1,200 people an hour in each direction.

This is the type of visionary undertaking that will really address the issue of slums in the 21st century. Rural migration, population growth and the expansion of cities are inexorable trends that are - and will continue to be - very difficult to thwart. One way of looking at the issue is searching for possibilities to improve infrastructure, service delivery and availability in scalable, realistic ways. Urban Think Tank is among the first to seize the opportunity (and risk) of envisioning and implementing a vision for more humane, more livable slums.

Image: Flickr user rooshv caracas barrios

 

G-20 and the World's Poor

Mark Leon Goldberg September 25, 2009 - 8:40 am

Comment ( 1 )  

Poor countries did not create the crisis, but they are bearing of the brunt of its human toll.   In countries where social safety nets are non-existent, even a modest economic decline puts lives in the balance.  The World Bank estimates that if the financial crisis is not brought to heel soon, 1.4 million to 2.8 million children in the developing world will die of malnutrition in the next six years.

At the G-20 Summit in London, the assembled leaders agreed to relief package for the world's poorest countries to help soften the blow of the financial crisis.  Leaders promised $1 trillion for developing countries, about $50 billion of which is intended for 78 low income countries that have been hit the hardest by the financial crisis. 

At the time, civil society groups expressed cautious optimism about the move. But a new report by Jubilee USA shows that donor countries have been slow to follow through on their commitments.  To date, only about half of the promised funds, about $23.5 billion, has been delivered.

To that end, the report makes a pretty salient point:

$18 trillion dollars has been found globally to bail out banks and other financial institutions. Just the top 20 “too big to fail” companies on Wall Street received $283 billion in bailout money from U.S. taxpayers – that’s 10 times more than the entire G-20 has delivered in new resources to the 2.7 billion residents of the 78 low income countries. With the lives of millions hanging in the balance, the developing world is also “too big to fail”.

I'll be watching the events in Pittsburgh to see how, if at all, the need sof the world's poor are taken into account the next few days.

 

Founder of One Laptop Per Child Responds

Mark Leon Goldberg September 10, 2009 - 6:06 pm

Comment ( 26 )  

Nicholas Negroponte, founder of One Laptop per Child, reponded in the comment section of a post in which Alanna suggested that the "dream of one laptop per child is over."  Here is Negroponte's comment in full.  (NB: Negroponte says this is a "UN site." It is not.)      UPDATE:  Some readers are having trouble seeing comments on Alanna's post.  I've copied those comments to end of these posts.  We truly appreciate alternative perspectives on this question and enjoy the debate. 

The dream is not over. When OLPC started there were no low cost laptops. We created the category less than four years ago and it now represents almost one third of the world production of latops. I am not aware of too many technologies that have gone from “impossible” to such wide adoption.

The million laptops, our little green ones, that are in the hands of children, are currently in 19 languages and 31 countries. Another million are on their way. Not bad. But even better, these countries include Afghanistan, Haiti, Ethiopia, as well as places like the West Bank (and next month Gaza). Even better, eh?

I suggest you look more carefully at Uruguay, Peru and Rwanda. In the case of Uruguay, every child has one. That is pretty amazing. Peru is headed there. Rwanda too. In fact, we have moved our learning group (as of early June) to Kigali perminently, to be in the field and get the kind of feedback you claim we ignore.

Anyway. I do not normally answer press and blogs, because we would spend all our time with words, not actions in the field But you are on a UN site and the UN is our partner. Check out Kofi Annan’s words -- they have been fulfilled. Has it been harder than I expected? Yes. But do you know why? It is not due to what I had anticipated, things like corruption and logistics. It has been due to commercial interests and press, stories like yours.

As a small non-profit, humanitarian organization, it is hard to battle giants who view children as a market, not a mission, and have other agendas. In spite of all that, the change is huge. I no longer hear people arguing against “one laptop per child” as a concept. The issue is purely a matter of funding and there are many ways to do that. Wait and see.

Nicholas Negroponte

More comments below the fold.

<!--break-->

 

The Dream is NOT over at least in Uruguay

This is a response to Alanna Shalikhʼs post of September 9, 2009 titled “One Laptop Per Child - The Dream is Over”

Will not repeat the excellent points brought by previous responses including Mr. Negroponteʼs.

This is my own personal view, I am one of the over one thousand volunteers working in Uruguay, in a group called Red de Apoyo al Plan Ceibal, RAP Ceibal.

The OLPC plan in Uruguay is well and alive, with no plans to disappear.

One important fact: The main opposition candidate in next month presidential elections, has gone to extremes to explain how good the Plan Ceibal is.

He publicly recognized it as one of the good projects implemented by the current government.

My wife and I lived and worked in New York City for over forty years.

During those years we participated first-hand in the introduction of two new technologies in our business.

In 1983 we introduced the first computer in our office.

In 1997 we started a website and used it as the center for our business.

Those two introductions of new technologies were no different from what we see in Uruguay with the XO computers and Plan Ceibal/OLPC.

The normal reaction of most human beings to any new technology is fear.

And the immediate reaction to fear is rejection.

Yes, a lot of people, have a negative first reaction.

Particularly the older individuals who have had successful careers for many years without the new technology.

Those who repeat their comments without thinking, of course don't help the process of accepting new modern tools.

But technology doesnʼt go away so easily. And much the less when young children without prejudices or fears have tested it, liked it and approved it.

And much the less when those children are all the elementary school students and every year more and more in high school.

They keep the computers after leaving elementary school where they received them as their personal treasure to keep.

We should not worry about those rejecting the idea.

Pretty soon they will see others succeeding and find out they too could succeed.

And those detractors will imitate the leaders.

Let me finish with a success story that makes me very proud.

We recently had the pleasure and honor of helping a school teacher from Uruguay, Fabiana Marella, make a remote presentation of her paper to Squeakfest USA 2009, an international conference at UCLA, University of California at Los Angeles.

Recording of her original presentation:

http://squeakland.org/resources/audioVisual/movie.jsp?id=54

Our spanish version of the same presentation:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0A61eiW7r4annotation_id=annotation_127705...

Carlos Rabassa


OLPC's dream lives in Sugar

Few people are aware that Sugar, the collaborative learning environment developed for the One Laptop Per Child project, is now an independent Open Source project delivering a rich set of activities for low-age children.

Sugar can be used with any hardware capable of running a Linux desktop, including many low-cost netbooks and existing computers in school labs. Using the Sugar on a Stick (SoaS) distribution, children can carry their personal copy of Sugar in their pockets and use it both in school and at home.

 


OLPC in Cambodia

Note: For anyone using XOs out there: we had someone come in and do a research project on our XO program who helped to match the Cambodian curriculm with XO programs and come up with learning ideas. If you want to learn more about this, contact us at PEPY www.pepyride.org

I think this is a very myopic view on the potential for change OLPC has started. If you had looked at the Apple2e computer I used when I was a kid maybe you would have only seen the basic programs I was using and not see what is possible today. We use the OLPC laptops in Cambodia and when I look at them in use, I see my Apple2e. It's very basic now in some ways, but that's the point. It's opensource. The people in the places that are using these can, will and are developing better and better programs for it.

I have been to the schools the Negropontes sponsor in Cambodia, which was our impetus to apply for laptops through the give-one-get-one program. Spend a day in one of their schools, and I guarantee you will change your mind, at least in terms of the potential for change, based on these tools.

If there was no word "laptop" in the name, they would have gotten a lot less press, but naming it a "learning tool" would have been a more correct choice and perhaps saved them a lot of criticism. It's not a “laptop” meant to replace what you and I are working on. It is a tool for kids to guide them through their own learning - when their teachers don't show up, when there is a huge differentiation between levels in one class, when there are too many students for one-on-one instruction.

I don't agree with Nicholas Negroponte that any child can pick one up and know how to fix the inside. I do agree with Alanna that, for the best learning environment, you need a great teacher or ideally facilitator, but that is the same for anything you are learning. I have seen in our students and the other OLPC programs we work with in Cambodia, that these tools are inspiring children to lead themselves into areas of education that they are not given access to in their normal government classes.

The word "lesson plan" is evil in the constructivism world of Papert followers and the child-led learning model of OLPC. No "how-to" guide is not an accident but was planned. I agree with Alanna that for most people, who have been spoon-fed their knowledge all their lives, they are not capable of making the leap and learning on their own. In a place like Cambodia some of the most educated young people I know are used to that: they teach themselves all they want to learn via the internet. We have found those people make great facilitators for the program and we don’t follow all constructivist methodologies in our classroom, in fact we brought a researcher in to observe and analyze lessons our teachers had developed and to turn those into “lesson plans” (gasp!).

If you really believe "But it’s not going to change the world, or even affect it all that much." you have not made all of the connections to all of the ways it already HAS changed the word. It has some of the newest technologies in environmentally friendly parts, screen visibility in bright light, battery life, mesh-technologies, etc etc... and all of those things are ALREADY changing the world as others take them and continue to improve upon them.

Here in Cambodia, there are groups of young Cambodians who meet regularly to translate OLPC programs into Khmer. The new versions we just got have Khmer script and we are now using Scratch in Khmer as well. Walk into a classroom where we work with and see older students teaching younger students how to read Khmer via the animated Khmer testing program they designed themselves, and you will change your mind a bit. Talk to our computer teachers, young Cambodians who taught themselves how to use the XOs, and yes, they will tell you there is a lot they don't understand, but they are effecting change. You can’t see that from your office, but I can see it here. It's just the start! Each new version of the XO we get is better and better and will continue to be.

If you want to learn more about what we are doing with Scratch on the XOs or about the “lesson plans” our team developed to match the Khmer curriculm, contact us at PEPY www.pepyride.org


new dreams can be succesfull

We are a foundation in the Netherlands and since december 2007 we have done several projects with the XO laptop of OLPC and with other laptops like the Intel Classmate 3 and the ASUS EEE 901 and 1000H.

We disagree with your conclusion. The laptop is excellent and now the XO 1.5 is presented we know it will be good enough for all countries. The XO 1.5 is dual-boot, maybe this is the solution to reach more target groups. It is still the only laptop suitable for developing countries. Sugar is very nice although some things need to be finished.

In the Netherlands the XO has been tested at 2 poor schools. It was a big step forwards from every classroom one old computer with Windows 98 to every child a laptop. Since October 2008 the kids have used the laptops intensively. When you read what they chatted about it was 95% about what they discovered in the educational applications and on the internet, not about things outside education. One pupil discovered how to upgrade the software, explained it to the class and after 10 minutes everybody had the newest version, for free! Reading digital schoolbooks is very nice with this screen. After 9 months all laptops still did their job although they have also been used at home every day. In a few weeks we will publish our report about this pilot.
If this laptop could play Flash in a proper way they would like to order much more. Maybe the XO 1.5 is the solution for this problem.

Our projects in Nicaragua, Ghana and Tanzania have showed the same positive results. And learned us you have to be patient: education needs evolution, not revolution.

But working with the organisation OLPC is almost impossible. Bad communication, no support for NGO's, difficult to order XO's (now it is impossible) etc. We understand it is necessary to focus for such a small organisation with limited resources. However our own experiences and what we have seen about OLPC projects in countries like Mongolia (10.000 laptops still in stock, 1500 stolen) there is only one conclusion: OLPC has the wrong focus. If you have to start small in countries like the Netherlands where you need several years to really implement IT in education how can you expect you can do such a job in such countries in several weeks or months with hardly no support?

I have visited OLE Nepal, a local organisation of 20 persons collaborating with the government. They do it in the right way. Start small (2 schools, after 1 year 6 schools, now 23 schools), develop local content, use everything which is developed elsewhere, train the teachers, train people of the government in training teachers, set up internet connections, schoolservers etc. They have enough XO's now but there is a shortage of good people to manage new projects. Teachers and pupils are very happy using the XO's. OLE Nepal will report soon about it.

My dream is to start a new version of OLPC: Every Child A Laptop. Same concept, other focus, more collaboration, local manufacturing, willing to listen. Use the excellent R&D of MIT to develop the XO 2.0 and collaborate with companies and NGO's to implement it in a proper way. A small webshop to deliver laptops etc. to NGO's, grassroots and individuals. It is a pity OLPC is not interested. Maybe other organisations like to cooperate with us?

Frits Hoff

chair of the foundation OpenWijs.nl

www.openwijs.nl


Ignorance can justify assuming truth in false statements

It's amazing how ignorance of what is happening in the real world can be disguised so grossly to attempt to pass for truth what is simply false. I am responsible for the delivery of 300,000 (so far) XO's to Peruvian rural one classroom school children and we will be delivering 300,000 more next year. Let me address the statements one by one:

  1. "It was going to revolutionize education in the developing world." It has, our initial impact studies show student reading comprehension level increased to more than 100% the national average in the pilot school. Intrinsic motivation variables have increased about 50% in the first stage in a sample of over 100 schools. Discipline probles reduecd to zero as well as absenteeism.
  2. "They abandoned the human-powered power source." We don't want our undernourished children to spend their scarce calories generating power for a computer. A well fed human being can generate 20 watt, forget about children extenuating their breakfast less bodies in running the XO's after walking 4 hours to school. It seemed attractive to people who have no idea of what poverty really is.
  3. "They abandoned the special child-friendly OS". False again, Sugar is our OS of choice. Microsoft did a smart move designing a version of its XP OS that runs on the XO's but they still have to demonstrate it is worth the investment. It certainly opened a window of opportunity for secondary schools where learning to work with Office can be a valuable asset for employment opportunities. By the way it allowed us to receive a 1,000 XO-XP dual boot donated units that are serving secondary schools.
  4. "We fell in love with its tremendous promise and adorable shape." That is the problem with wealthy people, illusion about easy fixes that will magically solve problems to pacify their consciences. What is needed is hard work and conviction, on top of passion, not just falling in love.
  5. "nce the laptop finally started arriving in the developing world, its impact was minimal." Says who? what is the hard data you have to show.
  6. "We think." It doesn't show, who else besides you (singular) makes that we (plural). How can I tell you really "think".
  7.  "No one is doing much research on their impact on education" Do your homework, ask those who know. An impact study will not be trsustable before at least one year. Our initial studies are with limited samples and vcannot be published seriously. We (all the team at the Ministry of Education of Peru) are conducting an IDB sponsored two year impact study that has just begun. We use to say making a child takes nine months, no matter how many wone devote themselves to the task so you will have to wait to see the results.
  8. "OLPC didn’t provide tech support for the machines, or training in how to incorporate them into education. " False once more. So far we have had people from OLPC both technical and pedagogical with us all the time, every problem that arised was solved almost immediately. For a 22 year IBM veteran like me, OLPC response time was really surprisingly fast.
  9. "Teachers didn’t understand how to use the laptops in their lessons; some resented them." That is not a XO problem, may teachers are poorly educated because society does not seem to care about education more than talking about it, The amazing happening is how better education is resulting even with ill prepared teachers just because they now own a piece of technology. We knew our challenge was going to be to improve quality of education in spite of the quality of individual teachers, and it is happening. Teachers are slowly improving without children having to wait.
  10. "Kids like the laptops, but they don’t actually seem to help them learn." How did you find out? any reference. We have lots to the contrary.
  11. Businessweek called it two years ago. " If you read the whole article and slide show by Gerry Smith in Businessweek http://www.businessweek.com/magazine/content/08_24/b4088048125608.htm and not only the headline you will see first hand how the life of a rural andean community was cahnged for good thanks to OLPC.
  12. "He points out that supporting de-worming programs has more impact on child learning than the OLPC laptops" Any data to support this?
  13. "they’re now being outcompeted by commercial laptops" False, it is impossible to run 50 watt fragile high skill maintenance machines like the netbooks in rural villages that are weeks away from any form of civilization.

Think before typing, good luck

Oscar Becerra

Chief educational Technologies Officer

Ministry of Education of Peru


The end is the beginning?

I actually think that the problems OLPC is facing is creating a better actual process, as seen in the wider community providing increasingly large support for things like curricula development and technical manuals, and with things like the OLPCCorps semi-grassroots projects and the revamped Contributors Program that grants small numbers of laptops to seed community projects (http://wiki.laptop.org/go/Contributors_Program). Projects like these create a groundswell for sustainability, enable the creation and sharing of locally-relevant content, and help reveal real-world constraints in the real cost of the program. Now, perhaps they should have tried this more natural diffusion process through seed projects and change agents from the beginning, instead of pushing for huge, million-laptops-plus orders, but I think (hope?) that the real long-term and more sustainable dream is just beginning.


inaccurate article

This blog post makes several questionable and false statements. And it has a generally nasty and condescending tone which makes me rather sad.

OLPC did not "abandon" human power sources, however conventional wired <!-- @page { size: 8.5in 11in; margin: 0.79in } P { margin-bottom: 0.08in } --> electricity, generators or in some cases, solar power are much more efficient. Making children do hard physical labor to power their computer is not such a great idea. The hand crank was fragile and did not provide enough power. However, foot-treadle devices such as can be used to power a truck battery work reasonably well.

OLPC has not "abandoned the special child-friendly OS". It has shipped approximately 700,000+ units with Sugar and perhaps 7,000 with Windows (my unofficial estimates). OLPC has provided funding and support for SugarLabs to continue this free software development work, and Sugar is available as a desktop on any Fedora or Red Hat desktop post Fedora 10. The number of XO laptops sold for poor countries is about ten times the total number sold though the several "Give One Get One" promotions in North America and Europe.

The idea that the laptops were developed without end user input is patently false. There is an active and vocal community of OLPC users thoughout the world who participate -- see http://wiki.laptop.org/go/Participate through the OLPC wiki at http://wiki.laptop.org and many locally-based organizations. Among these are Plan Ceibal in Uruguay, OLE Nepal, and OLPC Rwanda. A partial list of regional groups can be found at http://wiki.laptop.org/go/Regional_groups . There are many local grassroots small deployments in dozens of counties. Last night at the Berkman Center for Internet Law and Society Open House we heard about a local grassroots deployment in Haiti spearheaded by Kevin Wallen(sp?) and Helene Dietrich(sp?) and the tremendous empowerment and social transformation and pride it has brought in that community.

The phrase "to call a spade a spade" has rather unfortunate racist connotations and seems singularly inappropriate on this UN blog.

OLPC pioneered the netbook market. It has set an unequaled standard in simplicity of maintenance, low power consumption, ruggedness and durability, high quality screen, long-range dual wireless capability, use of free and open source software, and openness to community collaboration. Designing and developing the hardware, software, applications, distributing the computers, and coordinating the hundreds of local initiatives was done by no more than 23 employees (at one time) including me.

Hundreds of volunteers work on the OLPC project through developing applications, answering end-user tickets via the support gang, helping administer the back-end infrastructure through the Volunteer Infrastructure Group and many other initiatives.

The XO has brought joy, pride and a window on the world for hundreds of thousands of children in poor and working class communities throughout the world.  Although I left OLPC in January, I am very proud of the work we have done and consider the year that I spent there as systems administrator to have been the high point of my life intellectually, educationally, and morally.

sincerely,

Henry Edward Hardy

Cambridge, MA, USA


inaccurate article

This blog post makes several questionable and false statements. And it has a generally nasty and condescending tone which makes me rather sad.

OLPC did not "abandon" human power sources, however conventional wired electricty, generators or in some cases, solar power are much more efficient. Making children do hard physical labor to power their computer is not such a great idea. The hand crank was fragile and did not provide enough power. However, foot-treadle devices such as can be used to power a truck battery work reasonably well.

OLPC has not "abandoned the special child-friendly OS". It has shipped approximately 700,000+ units with Sugar and perhaps 7,000 with Windows (my unofficial estimates). OLPC has provided funding and support for SugarLabs to continue this free software development work, and Sugar is available as a desktop on any Fedora or Red Hat desktop post Fedora 10. The number of XO laptops sold for poor countries is about ten times the total number sold though the several "Give One Get One" promotions in North America and Europe.

The idea that the laptops were developed without end user input is patently false. There is an active and vocal community of OLPC users thoughout the world who participate -- see http://wiki.laptop.org/go/Participate through the OLPC wiki at http://wiki.laptop.org and many locally-based organizations. Among these are Plan Ceibal in Uruguay, OLE Nepal, and OLPC Rwanda. A partial list of regional groups can be found at http://wiki.laptop.org/go/Regional_groups . There are many local grassroots small deployments in dozens of counties. Last night at the Berkman Center for Internet Law and Society Open House we heard about a local grassroots deployment in Haiti spearheaded by Kevin Wallen(sp?) and Helene Dietrich(sp?) and the tremendous empowerment and social transformation and pride it has brought in that community.

The phrase "to call a spade a spade" has rather unfortunate racist connotations and seems singularly inappropriate on this UN blog.

OLPC pioneered the netbook market. It has set an unequaled standard in simplicity of maintenance, low power consumption, ruggedness and durability, high quality screen, long-range dual wireless capability, use of free and open source software, and openness to community collaboration. Designing and developing the hardware, software, applications, distributing the computers, and coordinating the hundreds of local initiatives was done by no more than 23 employees (at one time) including me.

Hundreds of volunteers work on the OLPC project through developing applications, answering end-user tickets via the support gang, helping administer the back-end infrastructure through the Volunteer Infrastructure Group and many other initiatives.

The XO has brought joy, pride and a window on the world for hundreds of thousands of children in poor and working class communities throughout the world.  Although I left OLPC in January, I am very proud of the work we have done and consider the year that I spent there as systems administrator to have been the high point of my life intellectually, educationally, and morally.

sincerely,

Henry Edward Hardy

Cambridge, MA, USA


One Laptop per Child

 

 


OLPC

 

 

UN Special Envoy to Haiti Bill Clinton addresses the Security Council

Mark Leon Goldberg September 10, 2009 - 9:48 am

Comment ( 2 )  

Bill Clinton at the Security Council yesterday. The Secretary General tapped president Clinton as his Special Envoy to Haiti earlier this year.

 

Netroots Nation panel video

Mark Leon Goldberg August 31, 2009 - 10:43 am

Comment ( 3 )  

For those unable to attend Netroots Nation in Pittsburgh earlier this month, here is the video of the UN Dispatch panel: Global Solutions for Global Poverty. I moderated, with commentary from OXFAM's Ray Offenheiser, Anita Sharma of the UN Millennium Campaign, Ginny Simmons from ONE and Matthew Yglesias.  Let us know what you think. 

<!--break-->

 

Live Blogging the Netroots Nation UN Dispatch Panel

Mark Leon Goldberg August 14, 2009 - 1:17 pm

Comment ( 1 )  

From Chris Scott

Hi there. Mark is up on stage moderating. I'm Chris Scott, from ONE, in the audience at the Netroots Nation panel.   I'll be live blogging the session, which is set to begin momentarily.

Ray Offenheiser kicks off the panel with the premise that "poverty is not news."  All of us who work on these issues day in and day out have to confront the fact that poverty is rarely news until terrorism strikes.  Unfortunately, inequality is the status quo.

He goes on to explain that poverty is not about a lack of things-- we live in a world of plenty.  It's about access and exclusion.  For instance, in the US obesity is epidemic while millions of others go hungry around the world.  "Poverty is about powerlessness."

Ray goes on to discuss the successes in fighting global poverty, arguing against thinking of confronting this challenge as "charity."  He uses Ghana as an example of a country at a crossroads.  Will Ghana use funds from oil production for health, education?

Says the greatest challenge facing our generation is climate change.  The poorest people in the world are being hit first and hit hardest.  Every year millions are one bad crop away from famine.  He explains that whatever is decided at Copenhagen in December, the world's poorest need to be taken into account.

We have the tools to fight global poverty-- it's up to us to use them.  Organizations like Oxfam seek to provide that.  Ray ends by asking the audience to join all of the panel's campaigns.

.....

Anita Sharma speaks next and begins by really reiterating Ray's point that ending extreme poverty is an attainable goal.  She goes on to describe the Millennium Development Goals as a framework, underscoring the eighth goal: the promise of developed countries to increase development assistance and deliver more effective aid.  In return, poor countries promise to implement aid effectively, increase transparency and accountability.  All of this serves to create a real partnership.

Anita moves on to what is happening in the US politically and policy-wise.  Cites Obama's assurance that the Millennium Development Goals should become America's goals.  Anita describes Secretary Clinton and Ambassador Rice as "torch bearers" for the MDG's.  However, trade and investment are drying up.

Tells audience there are concrete ways to get in touch with our elected officials around important legislation that supports the MDG's.  Lists current and upcoming fights: climate change, food security initiative, economic crisis.  All of which will be addressed at upcoming G20 Summit in Pittsburgh.

Ends with a push for Stand Up Against Poverty now entering it's 4th year.  This year's Stand Up event will take place on October 16-18.  It's extremely important that we create a movement.

.....

Ginny Simmons from ONE is up next.  She runs through specifically ONE's online efforts around fighting extreme poverty and global disease.

Among ONE's online accomplishments, she names the On the Record campaign during the 2008 US presidential race in which ONE actively sought "on the record" commitments from nearly all presidentail candidates about what they would do to combat global poverty as president.  She also discusses ONE's organizing around the August congressional recess as a very successful example of online/offline mobilizing.

For ONE, the internet is a key organizing and mobilizing tool.

.....

Matt Yglesias takes the podium and begins by speaking about the genesis and evolution of progressive netroots.  Primarily, what are progressives' idea of the United States' role in the world?  In the future, looking back at America's legacy, wouldn't it be great to say one of our key accomplishments was eliminating global poverty?

Climate change is obviously a hot button topic in America, but lost in the mix is the immense impact climate change takes on the world's poor.  But the netroots can play a big role in shifting this kind of conversation.  Echoes Ray's earlier point that global poverty doesn't get a ton of attention in the US, but again, netroots is important in shifting the focus from viewing the topic in a purely military lens.

......

Question & Answer session begins.

Ray fields a question about nonprofit microfinance's role in uplifting people in poverty.  Ray cites Grameen Bank as an innovative example of some of the work being done right now around microfinance.  He also makes a case for the role that microfinancing can play in combatting some of the threats of climate change.

Anita discusses some bills supporting MDG's including the Global Poverty Act introduced by Representative Adam Smith.  Suggests audience go to Oxfam's and ONE's site to learn about and track this legislation, but also stresses the importance around contacting and meeting with our elected officials.

Ray ends the discussion by stressing the need for building up civilian personnel to deliver development assistance in poor countries.  He says that the State Department needs funding that, if not equal to, should at least be proportionate to that of the Defense Department, and passionately calls on the netroots to push for legislation that can legitimately end global poverty.

And that's a wrap.  Many thanks to Mark for allowing me to hijack his blog and write about this excellent panel.

 

The "bingo" strategy of development

John Boonstra August 10, 2009 - 1:00 pm

Comment ( 1 )  

I'm not sure how I feel about this...

The French government is considering introducing a special lottery for Africa to supplement development aid.

"It could be bingo for Africa, or a lotto," said the French Secretary of State for Co-operation, Alain Joyandet.

It depends what you think of gambling, and what you think of development aid, I suppose.  On the former, I guess that old folks' bingo money might as well be going to a good cause, though it would pretty much undo the benefit if obsessive lotto players are being impoverished to help un-impoverish Africans.  On the development side...well, I'd be interested to see what Chris Blattman and Bill Easterly would think of this scheme...

(image from flickr user klynslis under a Creative Commons license)

 

Progress on the MDGs?

Matthew Cordell July 31, 2009 - 10:24 am

Comment ( 5 )  

The 2009 MDG Report (pdf), leading into the 2010 MDG review conference that represents the last major recommitment before 2015, is both promising and disturbing.  Actual progress has been made, but the economic crisis is cutting severely into those gains, and, at this pace, the world will fall far short of achieving the Goals.

Overall, the number of people living in poverty (under $1.25 a day) had dropped by 400 million from 1990 to 2005 (1.4 billion) despite the growth in world population, an astounding number that, on its own, is proof that the Goals are achievable. However, the economic crisis chiseled away at that progress, and 90 million more people are expected to be added back to those rolls this year.  Success in reducing hunger worldwide is likewise being reversed.

<!--break-->

That news was delivered to the Hill last week at a well-attended briefing helmed by Anita Sharma, North American Coordinator of the Millennium Campaign, Francesca Perucci from UN Stats, and Dan Carucci, Vice President for Global Health at UNF. 

Carucci delivered good news on Goal 4. Deaths of children under the age of five dropped from 12.6 million a year in 1990 to 9 million a year in 2007. He specifically pointed out the dramatic surge in the delivery of bed-nets to combat malaria in Africa and the success of measles vaccination programs. The world is also nearing the goal of universal enrollment in primary education , particulary in southeast Asia and sub-Saharan Africa, where enrollment increased by 11 and 15 percent respectively between 2000 and 2007.

On every other mark though, we're far behind pace. The most stark reminder came from Carucci: "in 2000 500,000 women died while giving birht, 500,000 died in 2005, and 500,000 will die this year."  That is to say, there has been zero progress on Goal 5, reducing the maternal mortality rate by 75 percent.

The report overall is fascinating.  It's rare that you get an engaging accessment of how the entire world is working toward achieving collective goals. I highly recommend at least skimming the whole thing (pdf).

 

One beneficiary of the financial crisis

John Boonstra July 9, 2009 - 9:25 am

Comment ( 5 )  

Organized crime.

Antonio Maria Costa, executive director of the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime, said that until the onset of the financial crisis in 2008, the banking system "has been very active and clean," forcing organized crime to return to cash transactions.

"That was basically the situation until the financial crisis, which started as a liquidity problem, an unwillingness of banks to (engage in) inter-banking transactions," Costa said. "So you have on the one hand a supply, resources, cash from organized crime and you have banks very (that are) illiquid and striving for cash. Well, that is really license for organized crime to penetrate into the financial system."

And as with much of the rest of the economy, this dynamic is profiting the few at the expense of the many. Costa made his rather canny financial analysis during the launch of a program bringing multiple UN agencies together to combat West Africa's rampant trafficking problems, which span from drugs to toxic wastes (?!?). The UN's political, economic, and peacekeeping offices are all involved in the effort, which is placing an emphasis on the post-conflict issues that trouble much of the region.

On the plus side, it does seem that the "cocaine iceberg" of trafficking from West Africa to Europe is shrinking.

 

  • Related Sites
  • UNITED NATIONS FOUNDATIONS
  • UN WIRE
  • Join Us On
  • t
  • f